Jan 05

Buying a TV

Filed under: GeneralMatthew Revell at 10:33 pm

For the second time in two years, our main TV has shifted out of focus: headache inducing, eye straining, Mr Magoo out of focus.

TV repair bloke says it’s not worth fixing a second time; apparently it’s well known that Samsungs have dodgy tubes and it’ll only go out of focus again. Might as well put the £50 repair fee towards a new set.

Trouble is, now it’s nigh-on impossible to buy a decent-sized CRT TV. Currys, Comet, Argos all have a few portables but, in-store, I haven’t seen anything I’d consider living room size.

I could, of course, give in and buy an LCD TV; after all, everyone else is. While I wouldn’t go so far as saying that HD is the answer to a question no one asked, I am nonetheless astounded that CRT TVs have disappeared from bricks and mortar shops and that people are happy to believe that standard definition images are anything but awful on the current crop of LCD TVs.

While I stand in Comet and marvel at compression artefacts, pixelation and motion blur, other shoppers - seeing precisely the same image - appear happy to ignore the evidence of their eyes and instead listen to the sales person who tells them they too can be a part of this great leap forward. I know too many people who have congratulated themselves on the replacement of their perfectly good CRT with an LCD set. Either I’m over-fussy, the shops have poorly configured their display TVs (quite likely) or everyone else has found a source of LCD TVs that aren’t entirely shite.

I know, the whole point of these sets is HD. I admit that the HD images on the demo sets have been impressive. Equally, the HD sports broadcasts I saw in the States a couple of months back were an improvement over dodgy old NTSC. Thing is, I have no HD video sources: no PS3 or Xbox 360, no Blueray or even an upscaling DVD player and there just isn’t that much HD TV available, even if you pay Sky’s £10 monthly premium for their HD service. And besides, I’m even a little underwhelmed by the performance of some sets when they’ve got an HD source.

Perhaps standard definition just isn’t the strong point of the software in the LCD sets. After all, software’s pretty much the only differentiator between brands, particularly when one company produces a huge chunk of all the world’s LCD screens. And yes, LCD displays never do particularly well when displaying an image not in their native resolution. But I’m not expecting to watch a 625 line image on a 54 inch. I just want what I have now: a non-pixelated, non-jerky, crisp image on a screen around 30 inches. I’m quite happy to have a CRT, if there really is no way an LCD screen can handle those modest requirements.

So, I’ve bought a 28 inch JVC CRT TV from the Dixons website for £150. The one that’s turned up is buggered - purple strip in the middle of the screen, image pin-cushioned - but, assuming the replacement works, I feel as though I’ve been lucky to grab one of the last opportunities to buy a TV that can actually handle standard definition inputs.

3 Responses to “Buying a TV”

  1. neuro says:

    Shame you didn’t try stuff out more; my folks bought a 32″ Sony Bravia recently, and while the output from their respective PVRs (they have one each!) isn’t fantastic, the output from the onboard Freeview tuner is. As you rightly say, shops such as Currys, Tesco, et al tend to either have their display models badly configured and/or run a really shit SD source through them (Tesco are really bad at this). You really should reconsider getting an LCD TV in the future, and before you do, get some advice from expert websites and get an in-person demo at somewhere like a large retail park Currys with a dedicated viewing room, a Sony Centre or similar.

  2. MattJ says:

    On the upside, it means that Second hand CRT’s are dirt cheap, I got a 32″ Sony with a Dvd and surround system for £100.It was only a couple of years old! Looks and sounds very nice, although it was lucky I had a big corner to put it in, as it is quite big…

    I won’t be getting an LCD untill this one gives up the ghost, or I need something more space efficient.

  3. Chris - Home Appliances Ltd says:

    It’s frustrating to read this. We collect 2000+ CRT TV’s each month and dismantle them (working or not) to recycle. The prefered option is to REUSE first, but knobody wants them except us oldies that don’t care if their TV has a lump at the back you never see.